Why Are So Many Experts Becoming Invisible?

@Jennifer Diokno below is the newsletter for the website

Expertise alone is no longer enough if nobody can clearly understand what you're known for.

A founder paid me 5k last week to review his LinkedIn profile.

This wasn't someone early in his career. He had more than 20 years of experience, 3 successful exits, a methodology he had spent years refining, and the kind of reputation that made other founders call him when they needed advice.

He was genuinely one of the most capable people I've spoken with all year.

Then I got to the line that was supposed to summarize everything he had built.

"Helping leaders unlock their potential."

I laughed.

Not because it was bad.

Because it could have belonged to almost anyone.

I told him, as gently as I could, that he'd just paid me five thousand dollars for a Google search.

And honestly, that conversation has been stuck in my head ever since.

Most experts aren't getting overlooked because they lack experience.

They're getting overlooked because the market struggles to understand what makes them different.

For years, we treated expertise and authority like they were the same thing, they aren't.

Expertise is what you know. Authority is what people recognize you for.

One exists inside your business. The other exists inside the minds of the people you want to reach. The gap between those 2 things is where a lot of founders get stuck.

I've started noticing this pattern in conversation after conversation. Founders with incredible experience, impressive results, and legitimate expertise are still struggling to create the opportunities they know they should be getting.

Not because they aren't good enough, because they aren't clear enough.

The internet changed. More specifically, discovery changed.

The data is starting to reflect just how quickly this is happening. Recent research found that LinkedIn is now the second most-cited domain across major AI search engines, appearing in 11% of AI-generated responses.

The same study found that 95% of B2B buyers using AI rely on it to research vendors and solutions, while 84% are already using AI search tools directly during the buying process. In other words, AI is no longer influencing a handful of decisions around the edges. It is increasingly shaping who gets considered before a conversation ever begins.

There was a time when people would spend hours researching before making a decision. They would compare websites, review credentials, read testimonials, and work their way through a long list of options before deciding who they trusted.

Today, that process looks very different. People are increasingly getting recommendations, summaries, and answers before they ever visit a website.

That means the question is no longer: "Can someone find me?"

The question has become: "Can someone immediately understand what I'm known for and why it matters?"

Those are very different challenges.

AI is accelerating a problem that already existed.

When someone asks ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Copilot, or Google AI a question, those systems are looking for clarity. They are looking for patterns, consistency, evidence, and repeated associations between your name and a specific area of expertise.

In other words, they are looking for recognition. The founders who become easy to understand become easier to recommend. The founders who try to be everything to everyone often become difficult for both people and AI to place clearly.

Rachel and I keep seeing this in our client work. Most leaders don't have an expertise problem, they have a translation problem.

They know exactly what they do.

The market doesn't.

That's a very expensive gap.

Generic positioning removes the very thing people need in order to remember you.

Specificity.

The market doesn't remember everything you can do, it remembers the idea it can attach to your name.

That's how authority works. Not through popularity, not through followers, not through posting frequency, through recognition.

If your positioning sounds like it could belong to your competitors, it isn't helping people understand you. It's helping them confuse you.

Confusion has become one of the most expensive liabilities in business.

I think the next few years are going to create a clear divide. Some leaders will continue competing for attention. Others will focus on becoming known for something.

The first group will spend more time trying to stay visible.

The second group will spend more time becoming easier to trust, easier to understand, and easier to recommend.

That's the work Rachel and I are increasingly focused on. Not helping people become louder, helping them become unmistakable.

In a world where AI can generate content, visibility becomes easier to manufacture.

Trust doesn't.

Recognition doesn't.

Authority doesn't.

Those things still have to be earned.

Most founders don't have an expertise problem.

Most founders have a recognition problem.

The market cannot recommend what it cannot clearly understand.

So here's the question I've been thinking about lately:

If someone asked AI who you are and what you're known for, would the answer be obvious?

Or would it have to guess?

Authority begins the moment people no longer have to figure you out.

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🔵 ICYMI:

Rachel and I are hosting a live session on June 26 where we're unpacking one of the biggest questions facing founders, executives, and experts right now:

What happens when AI becomes the filter between your expertise and your next opportunity?

We'll break down:

🔵 Why so many credible experts are still being overlooked

🔵 What AI is actually evaluating when it recommends someone

🔵 The seven trust signals behind the YOUmanize™ Score

🔵 How Authority Architecture helps leaders become easier to trust, understand, and choose

If your expertise is real but your visibility feels inconsistent, this conversation is for you.

👉 Save your seat here: https://www.linkedin.com/events/ifaihadtorecommendonepersoninyo7466186754279260160/

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YOUmanize™ helps founders, executives, and experts understand how their authority is being perceived across the trust patterns that influence recognition, credibility, and recommendation.

👉 Get Your YOUmanize™ Score

YOUmanize